ABSTRACT

This collection explores the contributions of Hispanic women writers to ongoing Western debates on gender, power, ethics, and the environment, offering a wide range of essays that specifically portray the ways in which contemporary writers focus on issues of global impact in a deliberate and purposeful manner. The contributors analyze texts pertaining to all literary genres, examining a myriad of ethical, philosophical, and political perspectives including feminism, postcolonial theories, cultural and gender studies, information age studies, and ecofeminism.

The book visits continuities and discontinuities among Spanish and Latin American women with regards to the ways in which they approach writing as a political weapon: to express ecological concerns; to denounce social injustice; to re-articulate existing paradigms, such as local versus global, violence versus pacifism, immigrant versus citizen; and to raise consciousness about racist, sexist, and other discriminatory practices. Such use of writing as an instrument of ethical and political exploration is underlined throughout the different articles in the volume as the authors emphasize pluralism, social justice, gender equality, tolerance, and political representation.

This book offers readers a broad perspective on the multiple ways in which Hispanic women writers are explicitly exploring the social, political, and, economic realities of our era and integrating global perspectives and gender concerns into their writing, highlighting the unprecedented level of sociopolitical engagement practiced by 20th and 21st century Hispanic women writers. 

part |48 pages

Reshaping Gender by Rethinking Genre

chapter |18 pages

Policing Social Injustice

Alicia Giménez Bartlett's Petra Delicado Series

chapter |12 pages

Dialogue of Genres

Dystopian Buenos Aires in El niño pez (2004) by Lucía Puenzo

part |44 pages

Gender and Violence

chapter |16 pages

Writing for My Daughter, My Mother, My Grandmother

The Power of Words Against Women's Violence in Juana Castro's Del color de los ríos

chapter |11 pages

La Llorona

A Cultural Myth of the Latin American Woman in the Twenty-first Century

chapter |15 pages

Laura Restrepo's Delirio

A Refoundational Novel

part |51 pages

Women and the Environment

part |66 pages

Global Politics from a Gendered Perspective

chapter |17 pages

Toward a Theater Without Borders

The Global Context of Itziar Pascual's Dramaturgy

chapter |18 pages

In the Beginning there was Violence

Marvel Moreno's En Diciembre llegaban las brisas or the Genesis of Power

chapter |14 pages

Transcending a Watery Border

Unsettled Bodies and In-Between Subjects in Por la vía de Tarifa

chapter |16 pages

Writing an Engaged Novel in the Network Society

Belén Gopegui, Systemic Narratives, and Globalization